As a Sprint corporate customer I’m referred to as “preferred,” which basically translates to “preferred because I give them increasing amounts of money.” Anyway, it gets me a phone upgrade annually, rather than the non-preferred biannual deal. The only problem with an annually replaced gadget is you have to figure out how to use it annually too. I’m now on my third Android phone and that’s not including a tablet. They’ve all worked differently — and quirkily.
Android's Secret Superpowers
Posted by: Patrick Nelson December 28, 2011 05:00 AMAs a Sprint corporate customer I’m referred to as “preferred,” which basically translates to “preferred because I give them increasing amounts of money.” Anyway, it gets me a phone upgrade annually, rather than the non-preferred biannual deal. The only problem with an annually replaced gadget is you have to figure out how to use it annually too. I’m now on my third Android phone and that’s not including a tablet. They’ve all worked differently — and quirkily.